Amen. You're a lot more honest than the rest of us, that's for sure. Way too much bickering going on in here and not nearly enough celebrating.It's awesome seeing both the Avengers and X-men at the top of their games and getting lots of love! It's a good time to be a comic book fan.
I voted X-men because I thought the character arcs were more interesting and better acted. I'm also a ridiculously biased X-men fan.
It's awesome seeing both the Avengers and X-men at the top of their games and getting lots of love! It's a good time to be a comic book fan.

One thing I thought about when watching DOFP, was that the story would probably not consider the Avengers being in it. Perhaps Tony Stark or someone else would have found a way to beat the Sentinels, as they are non-mutant. So DOFP, even in the comics, would have disregarded other heroes in the Marvel universe... or just made the sentinels too powerful as robots to have conquered everybody else.
It's awesome seeing both the Avengers and X-men at the top of their games and getting lots of love! It's a good time to be a comic book fan.
I voted X-men because I thought the character arcs were more interesting and better acted. I'm also a ridiculously biased X-men fan.
Days of Future Past outdoes Avengers in it's first five minutes. The scenes of the mutants battling the Sentinels are just as cool, spectacular and fan-pleasing as anything in Avengers, but they are also desperate and ominous - we really believe the good guys are fighting for their lives. In The Avengers, there really is no doubt who is going to win the day. As much fun as it is watching Downey and co take out hordes of aliens for half and hour, there's no real sense of danger.
Days of Future Past outdoes Avengers in it's first five minutes. The scenes of the mutants battling the Sentinels are just as cool, spectacular and fan-pleasing as anything in Avengers, but they are also desperate and ominous - we really believe the good guys are fighting for their lives. In The Avengers, there really is no doubt who is going to win the day. As much fun as it is watching Downey and co take out hordes of aliens for half and hour, there's no real sense of danger.
I disagree.
The Sentinels were clearly more of a threat than the Chitauri for sure.
But who gives a **** about those X-Men in the future sequences? All of them are just cardboard cut outs with super powers. And with the time travel retcon element, they are never in any real danger. Whilst some of their deaths at the end were brutal... i just didn't care. I don't care about Storm, i don't care about Warpath, i don't care about Blink... why should i? They have about 10 lines of dialogue between all of them.
In the Avengers the characters are fully realised. They ain't just cardboard cut outs defined by their powers (which is the very definition of a poor character). And towards the end of the battle we are shown the Avengers getting overwhelmed, even Hulk.
Plus that minute long tracking shot showing the Avengers fighting together, culminating with Hulk punching Thor in Grand Central station is still the pinnacle of superhero "team up" action for me.
The problem I have with the scenes of X-Men fighting a helpless battle against the futuristic Sentinels is that we knew with Kitty's power of sending another X-Men's conscious back in time, they can recon their deaths if the mission is successful, so once that is established I didn't really feel their lives were ever threatened. And I knew Wolverine's mission to stop Mystique from killing Trask will be accomplished, so even when the X-Men in the future were dying left and right, there wasn't any doubt what the outcome will be. DOFP is a great movie, but its battles were never ominous or in doubt.
lol well every single goon in Nolan's Batman movies?
But yea, the Chitauri are really weak. I can see how they were used though. Basically as a means to an end. The Avengers was all about these people coming together. And whilst the Chitauri as individuals were really weak, the film effectively showed that if the Avengers didn't shut the portal, they'd eventually be defeated simply by the Chitauri having overwhelming numbers.
Agreed.
Whedon needed to emphasize more the fact that the Avengers were getting exhausted, and there were way more Chitauri to come. They were about to get overwhelmed (he sort of did this with the Hulk, but it's more like the Chitauri already through the portal just teamed up on the Hulk). The climax would have been far more exciting if the Avengers were about to capitulate due to shear numbers, more Chitauri were about to arrive, and New York is about to get nuked.
I disagree.
The Sentinels were clearly more of a threat than the Chitauri for sure.
But who gives a **** about those X-Men in the future sequences? All of them are just cardboard cut outs with super powers. And with the time travel retcon element, they are never in any real danger. Whilst some of their deaths at the end were brutal... i just didn't care. I don't care about Storm, i don't care about Warpath, i don't care about Blink... why should i? They have about 10 lines of dialogue between all of them. The film makers assume i'm going to care about these character just because they are apparently good guys? No, that isn't how it works.
In the Avengers the characters are fully realised. They ain't just cardboard cut outs defined by their powers (which is the very definition of a poor character). And towards the end of the battle we are shown the Avengers getting overwhelmed, even Hulk.
Plus that minute long tracking shot showing the Avengers fighting together, culminating with Hulk punching Thor in Grand Central station is still the pinnacle of superhero "team up" action for me.
So overall, neither film has that much tension really. DoFP because i couldn't care less if these cardboard cut outs live or die. Avengers because the Chitauri aren't that much of a threat. But at least with Avengers there is characters you can root for with motivations and personalities you can understand. And they are actually shown doing things other than saving their own skin.
Agreed.
Whedon needed to emphasize more the fact that the Avengers were getting exhausted, and there were way more Chitauri to come.
But we know the heroes are going to win anyway. We knew that going in, we knew that when the movie was announced. The point is, in DoFP, the mutants in the future win by the very skin of their teeth, and that's what makes it exciting. Whereas in Avengers (much as I enjoy it) there's no real sense of impending doom.
But like Endless said, in Avengers you do care about the heroes since they have been in development over several movies, and in some cases have their own movie leading up to TA. Therefore, no matter what you feel a sense of attachment to the Avengers and you want them to win and survive. In DOFP, we were given a bunch of cardboard figures with super powers, and even though their fate seemed dire, I didn't really feel invested in the lives of Warpath, Bishop, Sunspot, and even Colossus, especially when I knew that their deaths can be reconned. At least in TA, they didn't have a convenient way to retract their deaths if they failed.